The
United Nations Organization
(
UNO) or simply
United Nations
(
UN) is an
international organization whose
stated aims are facilitating cooperation in
international law,
international security,
economic development,
social progress,
human
rights, and the achieving of
world
peace. The UN was founded in 1945 after
World War II to replace the
League of Nations, to stop
wars between
countries, and to
provide a platform for dialogue. It contains multiple subsidiary
organizations to carry out its missions.
There are currently
192
member states, including nearly every
sovereign state in the world. From its
offices around the world, the UN and its specialized agencies
decide on substantive and administrative issues in regular meetings
held throughout the year.
The organization is divided into
administrative bodies, primarily: the General Assembly (the main
deliberative assembly); the
Security Council
(for deciding certain resolutions for peace and security); the
Economic and
Social Council (for assisting in promoting international
economic and social cooperation and development); the Secretariat (for providing
studies, information, and facilities needed by the UN); the
International
Court of Justice
(the primary judicial organ). Additional
bodies deal with the governance of all other
UN System agencies, such as the
World Health Organization
(WHO), the
World Food Programme
(WFP) and
United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF).
The UN's most visible public figure is the
Secretary-General,
currently Ban Ki-moon of South Korea
, who attained the post in 2007. The
organization is financed from assessed and voluntary contributions
from its member states, and has six official languages:
Arabic,
Chinese,
English,
French,
Russian and
Spanish.
History
Following in the wake of the failed
League of Nations (1919–1946), which the
United States never joined, the United Nations was established in
1945 to maintain international peace and promote cooperation in
solving international economic, social and humanitarian problems.
The earliest concrete plan for a new world organization was begun
under the aegis of the U.S. State Department in 1939.
Franklin D. Roosevelt first coined the term
'United Nations' as a term to describe the
Allied countries. The term was first
officially used on January 1, 1942 when 26 governments signed the
Atlantic Charter, pledging to
continue the war effort.
On 25 April 1945, the UN
Conference on International Organization began in San
Francisco
, attended by 50 governments and a number of
non-governmental
organizations involved in drafting the Charter of the United
Nations. The UN officially came into existence on 24
October 1945 upon ratification of the Charter by the five permanent
members of the Security
Council—France
, the
Republic of
China
, the Soviet
Union
, the United Kingdom
and the United States
—and by a majority of the other 46
signatories. The first meetings of the General Assembly, with 51
nations represented, and the Security Council, took place in
Westminster
Central Hall
in London
in January
1946.
Since its creation, there has been controversy and criticism of the
UN organization. In the United States, an early opponent of the UN
was the
John Birch Society, which
began a "get US out of the UN" campaign in 1959, charging that the
UN's aim was to establish a "One World Government." After the
Second World War, the
French Committee of
National Liberation was late to be recognized by the US as the
government of France, and so the country was initially excluded
from the conferences that aimed at creating the new organization.
Charles de Gaulle criticized the
UN, famously calling it
le machin ("the thingie"), and was
not convinced that a global security alliance would help
maintaining world peace, preferring direct defence treaties between
countries.
Organization
The United
Nations system is based on five principal organs (formerly six –
the Trusteeship
Council suspended operations in 1994); the General Assembly, the Security Council, the Economic and Social Council
(ECOSOC), the Secretariat, and the International
Court of Justice
.
Four of
the five principal organs are located at the main United Nations
headquarters
located on international territory in New York City
. The International Court of Justice
is located in The Hague
, while other major agencies are based in the UN
offices at Geneva
, Vienna
, and Nairobi. Other UN
institutions are located throughout the world.
The six official
languages of the United
Nations, used in intergovernmental meetings and documents, are
Arabic,
Chinese,
English,
French,
Russian, and
Spanish, while the Secretariat uses two
working languages, English and French. Five of the official
languages were chosen when the UN was founded; Arabic was added
later in 1973. The United Nations Editorial Manual states that the
standard for English language documents is
British usage and
Oxford spelling (en-gb-oed), and the
Chinese writing standard is
Simplified Chinese.
This
replaced Traditional Chinese in
1971 when the UN representation of China was changed from the
Republic of
China
to People's Republic of China
.
General Assembly
The General Assembly is the main
deliberative assembly of the United
Nations. Composed of all
United Nations member states,
the assembly meets in regular yearly sessions under a president
elected from among the member states. Over a two-week period at the
start of each session, all members have the opportunity to address
the assembly. Traditionally, the Secretary-General makes the first
statement, followed by the president of the assembly.
The first session was
convened on 10 January 1946 in the Westminster
Central Hall
in London and included representatives of 51
nations.
When the General Assembly votes on important questions, a
two-thirds majority of those present and voting is required.
Examples of important questions include: recommendations on peace
and security; election of members to organs; admission, suspension,
and expulsion of members; and, budgetary matters. All other
questions are decided by majority vote. Each member country has one
vote. Apart from approval of budgetary matters, resolutions are not
binding on the members. The Assembly may make recommendations on
any matters within the scope of the UN, except matters of peace and
security that are under Security Council consideration.
Conceivably, the
one state,
one vote power structure could enable states comprising just
eight percent of the world population to pass a resolution by a
two-thirds vote. However, as no more than recommendations, it is
difficult to imagine a situation in which a recommendation by
member states constituting just eight percent of the world's
population, would be adhered to by the remaining ninety-two percent
of the population, should they object. (See
List of countries by
population.)
Security Council
The
Security Council
is charged with maintaining peace and security among countries.
While other organs of the United Nations can only make
'recommendations' to member
governments,
the Security Council has the power to make binding decisions that
member governments have agreed to carry out, under the terms of
Charter Article 25. The
decisions of the Council are known as
United Nations
Security Council resolutions.
The
Security Council is made up of 15 member states, consisting of 5
permanent members – China
, France
, Russia
, the
United
Kingdom
and the United States
– and 10 non-permanent members, currently Austria
, Burkina
Faso
, Costa
Rica
, Croatia
, Japan
, Libya
, Mexico
, Turkey
, Uganda, and Vietnam
. The five permanent members hold
veto power over
substantive
but not procedural resolutions allowing a permanent member to
block adoption but not to block the debate of a resolution
unacceptable to it. The ten temporary seats are held for two-year
terms with member states voted in by the
General Assembly on a
regional basis.
The presidency of the Security Council is
rotated alphabetically each month, and is held by Burkina Faso
for the month of December 2009.
Secretariat
The United Nations Secretariat is headed by the
Secretary-General, assisted
by a staff of international civil servants worldwide. It provides
studies, information, and facilities needed by United Nations
bodies for their meetings. It also carries out tasks as directed by
the UN Security Council, the UN General Assembly, the UN Economic
and Social Council, and other UN bodies. The United Nations Charter
provides that the staff be chosen by application of the "highest
standards of efficiency, competence, and integrity," with due
regard for the importance of recruiting on a wide geographical
basis.
The Charter provides that the staff shall not seek or receive
instructions from any authority other than the UN. Each UN member
country is enjoined to respect the international character of the
Secretariat and not seek to influence its staff. The
Secretary-General alone is responsible for staff selection.
The Secretary-General's duties include helping resolve
international disputes, administering peacekeeping operations,
organizing international conferences, gathering information on the
implementation of Security Council decisions, and consulting with
member governments regarding various initiatives. Key Secretariat
offices in this area include the Office of the Coordinator of
Humanitarian Affairs and the Department of Peacekeeping Operations.
The Secretary-General may bring to the attention of the Security
Council any matter that, in his or her opinion, may threaten
international peace and security.
Secretary-General
The Secretariat is headed by the
Secretary-General,
who acts as the
de facto spokesman and leader of the UN.
The current Secretary-General is
Ban
Ki-moon, who took over from
Kofi
Annan in 2007 and will be eligible for reappointment when his
first term expires in 2011.
Envisioned by
Franklin D.
Roosevelt as a "world
moderator", the position is defined in the
UN Charter as the organization's
"chief administrative officer", but the Charter also states that
the Secretary-General can bring to the
Security Council's attention
"any matter which in his opinion may threaten the maintenance of
international
peace and security",
giving the position greater scope for action on the world stage.
The position has evolved into a dual role of an administrator of
the UN organization, and a
diplomat and
mediator addressing disputes between
member states and
finding consensus to global issues.
The Secretary-General is appointed by the
General Assembly, after
being recommended by the Security Council. The selection can be
vetoed by
any member of the Security Council, and the General Assembly can
theoretically override the Security Council's recommendation if a
majority vote is not achieved, although this has not happened so
far. There are no specific criteria for the post, but over the
years it has become accepted that the post shall be held for one or
two
terms of five years, that the
post shall be appointed on the basis of geographical rotation, and
that the Secretary-General shall not originate from one of the five
permanent Security Council member states.
International Court of Justice
The
International Court of Justice (ICJ), located in The Hague
, Netherlands
, is the primary judicial organ of the United
Nations. Established in 1945 by the United Nations Charter,
the Court began work in 1946 as the successor to the
Permanent Court of
International Justice. The Statute of the International Court
of Justice, similar to that of its predecessor, is the main
constitutional document constituting and regulating the
Court.
It is
based in the Peace
Palace
in The
Hague
, Netherlands
, sharing the building with the Hague Academy of
International Law, a private centre for the study of
international law. Several of the Court's current judges are
either alumni or former faculty members of the Academy. Its purpose
is to adjudicate disputes among states. The court has heard cases
related to war crimes, illegal state interference and ethnic
cleansing, among others, and continues to hear cases.
A related court, the
International Criminal Court
(ICC), began operating in 2002 through international discussions
initiated by the General Assembly. It is the first permanent
international court charged with trying those who commit the most
serious crimes under international law, including war crimes and
genocide. The ICC is functionally independent of the UN in terms of
personnel and financing, but some meetings of the ICC governing
body, the Assembly of States Parties to the Rome Statute, are held
at the UN. There is a "relationship agreement" between the ICC and
the UN that governs how the two institutions regard each other
legally.
Economic and Social Council
The Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) assists the General
Assembly in promoting international economic and social cooperation
and development. ECOSOC has 54 members, all of which are elected by
the General Assembly for a three-year term. The president is
elected for a one-year term and chosen amongst the small or middle
powers represented on ECOSOC. ECOSOC meets once a year in July for
a four-week session.
Since 1998, it has held another meeting each
April with finance ministers heading key committees of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
(IMF). Viewed separate from the specialized
bodies it coordinates, ECOSOC's functions include information
gathering, advising member nations, and making recommendations. In
addition, ECOSOC is well-positioned to provide policy
coherence and coordinate the
overlapping functions of the UN’s subsidiary bodies and it is in
these roles that it is most active.
Specialized institutions
There are many UN organizations and agencies that function to work
on particular issues.
Some of the most well-known agencies are the
International Atomic Energy
Agency
, the Food and Agriculture
Organization, UNESCO
(United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization), the
World Bank and the World Health
Organization.
It is through these agencies that the UN performs most of its
humanitarian work. Examples include mass vaccination programmes
(through the WHO), the avoidance of famine and malnutrition
(through the work of the WFP) and the protection of vulnerable and
displaced people (for example, by the HCR).
The
United Nations Charter
stipulates that each primary organ of the UN can establish various
specialized agencies to fulfill its duties.
Specialized agencies of
the United Nations
| No. |
Acronyms |
Flag |
Agency |
Headquarters |
Head |
Established in |
| 1 |
FAO |
 |
Food and
Agriculture Organization |
Rome , Italy |
Jacques Diouf |
1945 |
| 2 |
IAEA |
 |
International Atomic Energy
Agency |
Vienna , Austria |
Mohamed ElBaradei |
1957 |
| 3 |
ICAO |
 |
International Civil Aviation
Organization |
Montreal , Canada |
Raymond Benjamin |
1947 |
| 4 |
IFAD |
 |
International
Fund for Agricultural Development |
Rome , Italy |
Kanayo F. Nwanze |
1977 |
| 5 |
ILO |
 |
International Labour
Organization |
Geneva , Switzerland |
Juan Somavía |
1946 |
| 6 |
IMO |
 |
International Maritime
Organization |
London , United Kingdom |
Efthimios E. Mitropoulos |
1948 |
| 7 |
IMF |
 |
International Monetary Fund |
Washington, D.C. , USA |
Dominique
Strauss-Kahn |
1945 |
| 8 |
ITU |
 |
International
Telecommunication Union |
Geneva , Switzerland |
Hamadoun Touré |
1947 |
| 9 |
UNESCO |
 |
United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization |
Paris , France |
Irina Bokova |
1946 |
| 10 |
UNIDO |
 |
United
Nations Industrial Development Organization |
Vienna , Austria |
Kandeh Yumkella |
1967 |
| 11 |
UPU |
 |
Universal Postal Union |
Berne , Switzerland |
Edouard Dayan |
1947 |
| 12 |
WB |
 |
World Bank |
Washington, D.C , USA |
Robert B. Zoellick |
1945 |
| 13 |
WFP |
 |
World Food
Programme |
Rome , Italy |
Josette Sheeran |
1963 |
| 14 |
WHO |
 |
World Health
Organization |
Geneva , Switzerland |
Margaret Chan |
1948 |
| 15 |
WIPO |
 |
World Intellectual
Property Organization |
Geneva , Switzerland |
Francis Gurry |
1974 |
| 16 |
WMO |
 |
World
Meteorological Organization |
Geneva , Switzerland |
Alexander Bedritsky |
1950 |
| 17 |
UNWTO |
 |
World Tourism
Organization |
Madrid , Spain |
Taleb Rifai |
1974 |
Membership
With the
addition of Montenegro
on 28 June 2006, there are currently 192 United Nations member states,
including all fully recognized independent states apart from Vatican City
(the Holy See, which holds
sovereignty over the state of Vatican City, is a permanent
observer).
The
United Nations Charter
outlines the rules for membership:
Group of 77
The
Group of 77 at the UN is a loose
coalition of
developing nations,
designed to promote its members' collective
economic interests and create an enhanced joint
negotiating capacity in the United Nations. There were 77 founding
members of the organization, but the organization has since
expanded to 130 member countries. The group was founded on 15 June
1964 by the "Joint Declaration of the Seventy-Seven Countries"
issued at the
United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
The first
major meeting was in Algiers
in 1967, where the Charter of Algiers was
adopted and the basis for permanent institutional structures was
begun.
Functions
Peacekeeping and security
The UN, after approval by the
Security Council, sends
peacekeepers to regions where armed
conflict has recently ceased or paused to enforce the terms of
peace agreements and to discourage combatants from resuming
hostilities. Since the UN does not maintain its own military,
peacekeeping forces are voluntarily provided by member states of
the UN. The forces, also called the "Blue Helmets", who enforce UN
accords are awarded
United Nations
Medals, which are considered
international decorations instead
of
military decorations. The
peacekeeping force as a whole received the
Nobel Peace Prize in
1988.
The founders of the UN had envisaged that the organization would
act to prevent conflicts between nations and make future wars
impossible, however the outbreak of the
Cold
War made peacekeeping agreements extremely difficult because of
the division of the world into hostile camps. Following the end of
the Cold War, there were renewed calls for the UN to become the
agency for achieving world peace, as there are several dozen
ongoing conflicts that continue to
rage around the globe.
A 2005 RAND Corp study found the UN to be successful in two out of
three peacekeeping efforts. It compared UN nation-building efforts
to those of the United States, and found that seven out of eight UN
cases are at peace, as compared with four out of eight US cases at
peace. Also in 2005, the
Human Security Report documented
a decline in the number of wars, genocides and human rights abuses
since the end of the
Cold War, and
presented evidence, albeit circumstantial, that international
activism—mostly spearheaded by the UN—has been the main cause of
the decline in armed conflict since the end of the Cold War.
Situations where the UN has not only acted to keep the peace but
also occasionally intervened include the
Korean War (1950–1953), and the authorization of
intervention in Iraq after the
Persian
Gulf War in 1990.
The UN has also drawn criticism for perceived failures. In many
cases,
member states
have shown reluctance to achieve or enforce Security Council
resolutions, an issue that stems from the UN's intergovernmental
nature—seen by some as simply an association of 192 member states
who must reach consensus, not an independent organization.
Disagreements in the Security Council about
military action and intervention are seen as having failed to
prevent the 1994 Rwandan Genocide,
failed to provide humanitarian aid
and intervene in the Second Congo
War, failed to intervene in the 1995 Srebrenica massacre and protect a
refugee haven by the authorizing the peacekeepers to use force,
failure to deliver food to starving people in Somalia
, failure to implement provisions of Security
Council resolutions related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict,
and continuing failure to prevent genocide or provide assistance in
Darfur
.
UN
peacekeepers have also been accused of child rape, sexual abuse or
soliciting prostitutes during various peacekeeping missions,
starting in 2003, in the Congo
, Haiti
, Liberia
, Sudan
, Burundi
and Côte d'Ivoire
. In 2004, former Israeli ambassador to the
UN
Dore Gold criticized what it called the
organization's
moral relativism in
the face of (and occasional support of)
genocide and
terrorism
that occurred between the moral clarity of its founding period and
the present day. Gold specifically mentions
Yasser Arafat's 1988 invitation to address the
General Assembly as a low point in the UN's history.
In addition to peacekeeping, the UN is also active in encouraging
disarmament. Regulation of armaments was
included in the writing of the
UN Charter
in 1945 and was envisioned as a way of limiting the use of human
and economic resources for the creation of them. However, the
advent of
nuclear weapons came only
weeks after the signing of the charter and immediately halted
concepts of arms limitation and
disarmament, resulting in the first
resolution of the first ever
General Assembly
meeting calling for specific proposals for "the elimination from
national armaments of atomic weapons and of all other major weapons
adaptable to mass destruction". The principal forums for
disarmament issues are the
General Assembly First
Committee, the UN Disarmament Commission, and the
Conference on Disarmament, and
considerations have been made of the merits of a
ban on testing nuclear
weapons,
outer space arms
control, the banning of
chemical
weapons and
land mines, nuclear
and conventional disarmament,
nuclear-weapon-free zones, the
reduction of
military budgets,
and measures to strengthen
international security.
The UN is
one of the official supporters of the World Security Forum, a major
international conference on the effects of global catastrophes and
disasters, taking place in the United Arab Emirates
, in October 2008.
Human rights and humanitarian assistance
The pursuit of
human rights was a
central reason for creating the UN. World War II atrocities and
genocide led to a ready consensus that the
new organization must work to prevent any similar tragedies in the
future. An early objective was creating a legal framework for
considering and acting on complaints about human rights violations.
The UN Charter obliges all member nations to promote "universal
respect for, and observance of, human rights" and to take "joint
and separate action" to that end. The
Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, though not legally binding, was adopted by the
General Assembly in 1948 as a common standard of achievement for
all. The Assembly regularly takes up human rights issues.
The UN and its agencies are central in upholding and implementing
the principles enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights. A case in point is support by the UN for countries in
transition to
democracy. Technical
assistance in providing free and fair elections, improving judicial
structures, drafting constitutions, training human rights
officials, and transforming armed movements into
political parties have contributed
significantly to democratization worldwide.
The UN has helped run
elections in countries with little or no democratic history,
including recently in Afghanistan
and East Timor. The UN is also a forum to
support the right of women to participate fully in the political,
economic, and social life of their countries.
The UN contributes to
raising consciousness of the concept of human rights through its
covenants and its attention to specific abuses through its General
Assembly, Security Council resolutions, or International
Court of Justice
rulings.
The purpose of the
United Nations Human Rights
Council, established in 2006, is to address human rights
violations. The Council is the successor to the
United Nations
Commission on Human Rights, which was often criticised for the
high-profile positions it gave to member states that did not
guarantee the human rights of their own citizens. The council has
47 members distributed by region, which each serve three year
terms, and may not serve three consecutive terms. A candidate to
the body must be approved by a majority of the General Assembly. In
addition, the council has strict rules for membership, including a
universal human rights review. While some members with questionable
human rights records have been elected, it is fewer than before
with the increased focus on each member state's human rights
record.
The rights of some 370 million
indigenous peoples around the world is
also a focus for the UN, with a Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples being approved by the
General Assembly in 2007.
The declaration outlines the individual and collective rights to
culture, language, education, identity, employment and health,
thereby addressing post-colonial issues which had confronted
indigenous peoples for centuries. The declaration aims to maintain,
strengthen and encourage the growth of indigenous institutions,
cultures and traditions. It also prohibits discrimination against
indigenous peoples and promotes their active participation in
matters which concern their past, present and future.
In
conjunction with other organizations such as the Red Cross
, the UN provides food, drinking water, shelter and
other humanitarian services to populaces suffering from famine, displaced by war, or afflicted by other
disasters. Major humanitarian branches of the UN are the
World Food Programme (which
helps feed more than 100 million people a year in 80 countries),
the office of the
High Commissioner
for Refugees with projects in over 116 countries, as well as
peacekeeping projects in over 24 countries.
Social and economic development
The UN is involved in supporting
development, e.g. by the formulation of
the
Millennium Development
Goals. The
UN
Development Programme (UNDP) is the largest multilateral source
of grant technical assistance in the world. Organizations like the
World Health Organization
(WHO),
UNAIDS, and
The
Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria are leading
institutions in the battle against
diseases
around the world, especially in poor countries. The UN Population
Fund is a major provider of reproductive services. It has helped
reduce infant and maternal
mortality in 100
countries.
The UN also promotes human development through various related
agencies.
The World Bank
Group and International Monetary Fund
(IMF), for example, are independent, specialized
agencies and observers within the UN framework, according to a 1947
agreement. They were initially formed as separate from
the UN through the Bretton Woods
Agreement in 1944.
The UN annually publishes the
Human Development Index (HDI), a
comparative measure
ranking
countries by
poverty,
literacy,
education,
life expectancy, and other
factors.
The
Millennium Development
Goals are eight goals that all 192 United Nations member states
have agreed to try to achieve by the year 2015. This was declared
in the
United
Nations Millennium Declaration, signed in September 2000.
Mandates
From time to time the different bodies of the United Nations pass
resolutions which contain operating paragraphs that begin with the
words "requests", "calls upon", or "encourages", which the
Secretary-General interprets as a mandate
to set up a temporary organization or do something. These mandates
can be as little as researching and publishing a written report, or
mounting a full scale peace-keeping operation (usually the
exclusive domain of the
Security
Council).
Although the specialized institutions, such as the
WHO, were originally set up by this means, they are not
the same as mandates because they are permanent organizations that
exist independently of the UN with their own membership structure.
One could say that original mandate was simply to cover the process
of setting up the institution, and has therefore long expired. Most
mandates expire after a limited time period and require renewal
from the body which set them up.
One of the outcomes of the
2005 World
Summit was a mandate (labeled
id 17171) for the Secretary-General to "review
all mandates older than five years originating from resolutions of
the General Assembly and other organs". To facilitate this review
and to finally bring coherence to the organization, the Secretariat
has produced an
on-line registry of mandates to draw together the
reports relating to each one and create an overall picture.
Other
Over the lifetime of the UN, over 80 colonies have attained
independence. The General Assembly adopted the
Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries
and Peoples in 1960 with no votes against but abstentions from
all major colonial powers. Through the
UN Committee on
Decolonization, created in 1962, the UN has focused
considerable attention on
decolonization. It has also supported the new
states that have arisen as a result self-determination initiatives.
The
committee has overseen the decolonization of every country larger
than 20,000 km² and removed them from the United
Nations list of Non-Self-Governing Territories, besides
Western
Sahara
, a country larger than the UK only relinquished by
Spain in 1975.
The UN declares and coordinates
international observances, periods
of time to observe some issue of international interest or concern.
Using the symbolism of the UN, a specially designed logo for the
year, and the infrastructure of the
United Nations System, various days
and years have become catalysts to advancing key issues of concern
on a global scale. For example,
World Tuberculosis Day,
Earth Day and
International
Year of Deserts and Desertification.
Funding
Top 10 donators to the UN budget, 2009
| Member
state |
Contribution
(% of UN budget) |
|
22.00% |
|
16.624% |
|
8.577% |
|
6.642% |
|
6.301% |
|
5.079% |
|
2.977% |
|
2.968% |
|
2.667% |
|
2.257% |
| Other member states |
23.908% |
The UN is financed from assessed and voluntary contributions from
member states. The regular two-year budgets of the UN and its
specialized agencies are funded by assessments. The General
Assembly approves the regular budget and determines the assessment
for each member. This is broadly based on the relative capacity of
each country to pay, as measured by their
Gross National Income (GNI), with
adjustments for external debt and low per capita income.
The Assembly has established the principle that the UN should not
be overly dependent on any one member to finance its operations.
Thus, there is a 'ceiling' rate, setting the maximum amount any
member is assessed for the regular budget. In December 2000, the
Assembly revised the scale of assessments to reflect current global
circumstances. As part of that revision, the regular budget ceiling
was reduced from 25% to 22%. The U.S. is the only member that has
met the ceiling. In addition to a ceiling rate, the minimum amount
assessed to any member nation (or 'floor' rate) is set at 0.001% of
the UN budget. Also, for the least developed countries (LDC), a
ceiling rate of 0.01% is applied.
The current operating budget is estimated at $4.19 billion for the
2-year (biennial)period of 2008 to 2009, or a little over 2 billion
dollars a year (refer to table for major contributors).
A large share of UN expenditures addresses the core UN mission of
peace and security. The peacekeeping budget for the 2005–2006
fiscal year is approximately $5 billion (compared to approximately
$1.5 billion for the UN core budget over the same period), with
some 70,000 troops deployed in 17 missions around the world. UN
peace operations are funded by assessments, using a formula derived
from the regular funding scale, but including a weighted surcharge
for the five permanent Security Council members, who must approve
all peacekeeping operations. This surcharge serves to offset
discounted peacekeeping assessment rates for less developed
countries. As of 1 January 2008, the top 10 providers of assessed
financial contributions to United Nations peacekeeping operations
were: the United States, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom,
France, Italy, China, Canada, Spain, and the Republic of
Korea.
Special UN programmes not included in the regular budget (such as
UNICEF, the
WFP and
UNDP) are financed by
voluntary contributions from other member governments. Most of this
is financial contributions, but some is in the form of agricultural
commodities donated for afflicted
populations.
Because their funding is voluntary, many of these agencies suffer
severe shortages during economic recessions. In July 2009, the
World Food Programme reported that it has been forced to cut
services because of insufficient funding. It has received barely a
quarter of the total it needs this for the 09/10 financial
year.
Personnel policy
The UN and its agencies are immune to the laws of the
countries where they operate, safeguarding UN's
impartiality with regard to the host and member countries. This
independence allows agencies to implement
human resources policies that may even be
contrary to the laws of a host – or a member country.
Despite their independence in matters of human resources policy,
the UN and its agencies voluntarily apply the
laws of member states regarding
same-sex marriages, allowing decisions
about the status of employees in a same-sex partnership to be based
on nationality. The UN and its agencies recognize same-sex
marriages only if the employees are citizens of countries that
recognize the marriage. This practice is not specific to the
recognition of same-sex marriage but reflects a common practice of
the UN for a number of human resources matters. It has to be noted
though that some agencies provide limited benefits to
domestic partners of their staff and
that some agencies do not recognise same-sex marriage or domestic
partnership of their staff.
Reform
Since its founding, there have been many calls for reform of the
United Nations, although little consensus on how to do so. Some
want the UN to play a greater or more effective role in world
affairs, while others want its role reduced to humanitarian work.
There have also been numerous calls for the UN Security Council's
membership to be increased, for different ways of electing the UN's
Secretary-General,
and for a
United
Nations Parliamentary Assembly.
The UN has also been accused of bureaucratic inefficiency and
waste. During the 1990s the United States withheld dues citing
inefficiency, and only started repayment on the condition that a
major reforms initiative was introduced. In 1994, the
Office of
Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) was established by the
General Assembly to serve as an efficiency watchdog.
An official reform programme was begun by
Kofi Annan in 1997. Reforms mentioned include
changing
the permanent membership of the Security Council (which
currently reflects the power relations of 1945), making the
bureaucracy more transparent, accountable and efficient, making the
UN more democratic, and imposing an international
tariff on
arms manufacturers
worldwide.
In September 2005, the UN convened a
World Summit that brought together the
heads of most member states, calling the summit "a
once-in-a-generation opportunity to take bold decisions in the
areas of development, security, human rights and reform of the
United Nations." Kofi Annan had proposed that the summit agree on a
global "grand bargain" to reform the UN, renewing the
organisation's focus on peace, security, human rights and
development, and to make it better equipped at facing 21st century
issues. The result of the summit was a compromise text agreed on by
world leaders, which included the creation of a
Peacebuilding Commission to help
countries emerging from conflict, a
Human Rights Council,
and a democracy fund, a clear and unambiguous condemnation of
terrorism "in all its forms and
manifestations", and agreements to devote more resources to the
Office of Internal Oversight Services, to spend billions more on
achieving the
Millennium
Development Goals, to wind up the
Trusteeship Council
because of the completion of its mission, and that the
international community has a "
responsibility to protect" – the
duty to intervene in when national governments fail to fulfill
their responsibility to protect their citizens from atrocious
crimes.
The Office of Internal Oversight Services is being restructured to
more clearly define its scope and mandate, and will receive more
resources. In addition, to improve the oversight and auditing
capabilities of the General Assembly, an Independent Audit Advisory
Committee (IAAC) is being created. In June 2007, the Fifth
Committee created a draft resolution for the
terms of reference of this committee. An
ethics office was established in 2006, responsible for
administering new financial disclosure and
whistleblower protection policies. Working
with the OIOS, the ethics office also plans to implement a policy
to avoid fraud and corruption. The Secretariat is in the process of
reviewing all UN mandates that are more than five years old. The
review is intended to determine which duplicative or unnecessary
programmes should be eliminated. Not all member states are in
agreement as to which of the over 7000 mandates should be reviewed.
The dispute centres on whether mandates that have been renewed
should be examined. As of September 2007, the process is
ongoing.
See also
References
- Office of the Secretary-General - United Nations.
- Charter of
the United Nations, Article 97.
- Charter of
the United Nations, Article 99.
- United Nations - Appointment Process of the
Secretary-General.
- Former Secretaries-General - United Nations.
- Kosovo and Taiwan are only partially recognized, and are not
recognized by the UN.
- Gold, 216–217
- Gold, 38
- United Nations Charter,
Article 26.
- UN General Assembly - 61st session - United Nations
adopts Declaration on Rights of Indigenous Peoples.
- the United Nations Special Committee on
Decolonization - Official Website.
- Financing of UN Peacekeeping Operations
-
http://diplomaticlaw.com/blog/2009/03/23/jerusalem-court-no-immunity-for-un-employee-for-private-acts/
- The Future of the United Nations: Understanding the Past to
Chart a Way Forward / Joshua Muravchik (2005) ISBN
978-0-8447-7183-0.
Further reading
- "Think Again: The United Nations", Madeleine K. Albright, Foreign Policy,
September/October, 2004.
- Hans Köchler, Quo Vadis,
United Nations?, in: Law Review, Polytechnic University
of the Philippines, College of Law, May 2005 Online version.
- An Insider's Guide to the UN, Linda Fasulo, Yale University Press (1 November
2003), hardcover, 272 pages, ISBN 0-300-10155-4.
- United Nations: The First Fifty Years, Stanley Mesler,
Atlantic Monthly Press (1 March 1997), hardcover, 416 pages, ISBN
0-87113-656-2.
- United Nations, Divided World: The UN's Roles in
International Relations edited by Adam Roberts and Benedict
Kingsbury, Oxford University
Press; 2nd edition (1 January 1994), hardcover, 589 pages, ISBN
0-19-827926-4.
- A Guide to Delegate Preparation: A Model United Nations
Handbook, edited by Scott A. Leslie, The United Nations
Association of the United States of America, 2004 edition (October
2004), softcover, 296 pages, ISBN 1-880632-71-3.
- "U.S. At War – International." Time Magazine XLV.19 7 May 1945:
25–28.
- The Oxford Handbook on the United Nations,
edited by Thomas G. Weiss and Sam Daws, Oxford University Press,
July 2007, hardcover, 896 pages, ISBN 978-0-19-927951-7, ISBN
0-19-927951-9.
- Gold, Dore. Tower of Babble: How
the United Nations Has Fueled Global Chaos. New York: Three
Rivers Press, 2004.
External links
- Official websites
- Other
- EQUITAS,
the Authority on Judicial Morality providing legal resources
helpful in aid for the better advancement of the Rule of Law.